Perfect Popcorn

Uncle George was my father’s older brother. He had a farm near Orchard, Nebraska and came to visit Grandma and Grandpa Rang every couple years when I was growing up. He raised corn, hogs and beef cattle. When we visited Uncle George and Aunt Alice and their family in Nebraska one time, my cousin Vernon took me out to see all the piglets. Vernon was seven and I was nine.

We climbed over the fence into the farrowing pen and watched the piglets nursing on the biggest sow I had ever seen. I am still impressed by that massive sow. Vernon then showed me the bull, the grain bins and his father’s big John Deere tractor, which also impressed me. It was an exciting introduction to another way of life that I shared with everyone when we came back into the house for supper.

Vernon’s mother was not pleased to hear that we had gone into the pen with the sow. I remember her saying that we could have been attacked and killed. But, young as he was, he had been taught to be careful around the sow. We did not go too close and so we lived to eat a good supper and have a ride around the fences on a wagon pulled behind the tractor.

One time Uncle George brought us some popcorn from his garden. For some reason it had never occurred to me that farmers like Uncle George could grow popcorn, and it prompted me to start begging my father to plant popcorn. When he explained that northern Wisconsin was not a good place to grow popcorn, I just kept saying that maybe if we tried we would have all the popcorn we wanted.

We planted two short rows of popcorn the next summer, and I hoed it with special care. I even carried water in buckets on my wagon to irrigate the rows during a bad dry spell in July. A frost in August before the kernels were hard ended my hopes, and we never tried growing popcorn again. Today I understand that some varieties have been developed that mature in a shorter time.

So we kept buying our popcorn at the A & P or Co-op, and my mother popped lots of it, especially in the winter. Watching “Gunsmoke,” “Dragnet” or “The Red Skelton Show” was even more fun with popcorn fresh from the pan and I think I saw my first Shakespearean play on “The Hallmark Hall of Fame” while chomping away. Mom first popped it in her large frying pan until she got an electric popper.

Our cook at Blair School, the one-room school I attended for three years, popped gallons of popcorn for us about two weeks before Christmas. She and our teacher showed us how to make ropes of popcorn and cranberries that we used to decorate the school Christmas tree. On the day before Christmas vacation, the janitor would show up early, and we would all help move the tree outside so the birds and rabbits would have a special Christmas treat too.

Once I entered college I graduated to an electric popper that was actually a multifunction food cooker used for everything from frying fish to warming soup. Over the years we have used at least two different electric poppers, a popper designed to be held in the fireplace or over a bonfire, many different frying pans and skillets and even those handy little packets you put in the microwave. The one thing that all these devices have in common is that they always leave a bunch of “old maids,” unpopped kernels, in the bottom of the bowl.

When a neighbor gave us an ice cream pail full of premium popcorn kernels last fall, I decided to search the Web for a popcorn recipe that might solve this problem. In a few minutes I found one on a wonderful food blog called “Simply Recipes.” I followed the instructions and am happy to report that it works. The ice cream pail is nearly empty, and I have had fewer than four old maids in any batch. Here is what you do.

INGREDIENTS:

3 T canola oil or other high smoke point vegetable oil
1/3 cup high quality popcorn kernels
Salt to taste

PROCEDURE:

Heat the oil and four kernels of popcorn over medium high heat in a three or four quart covered saucepan or skillet. When the kernels pop, remove the pan from the heat and add the corn. Cover the pan and swirl the kernels in the hot oil for thirty seconds.

Return the pan to the heat. The kernels will begin popping in a few seconds. Gently shake the pan over the burner. After the corn has been popping a few seconds, you can lift the lid slightly while shaking the pan to release any steam.

When the popping slows to a couple of seconds between pops, take the pan from the heat and dump the popcorn into a large bowl. Salt lightly and serve immediately.

NOTES: Popcorn pops because the moisture in the kernel expands when heated. Like any food product, popcorn dries out gradually. When I popped some from a partial bag of popcorn which had been hiding on a shelf for several years at the cabin, only half of the kernels popped, so buy good quality popcorn and try to use it within a year.

Some folks like to add melted butter to their popcorn, and until theaters started using imitation butter I used to order it when we went to movies. I love butter, but it makes my fingers greasy when I am eating popcorn. Besides, popcorn is one healthful food that I like as is. I do have some cheese-flavored salt that is pretty tasty, however.

Elise Bauer has a good explanation of why this method works so well. You can visit her site at simplyrecipes.com.

Grilled Corn and Avocado Salad with Lime-Cumin Vinaigrette

Susie, one of Jerri’s nieces, is a missionary with World Impact. For many years she worked with African-American and Hispanic families in Watts. Today she serves families in Wichita, Kansas.

Susie speaks Spanish as a second language and has learned many recipes from Latinas with whom she has become friends. Here is a salad that she made for us a couple of years ago that comes from “south of the border.”

Not only is Susie a past president of the Student Government Association at Wichita State University, she is also an excellent cook who shared a great recipe with her aunt and uncle. Follow her directions and I think you’ll agree.

INGREDIENTS:

1/2 tsp. ground cumin
1 tsp. crushed garlic
2 tsp. salt
6 T lime juice (preferably from small, sweet Mexican limes)
1/4 cup oil
2 lb. (about 3 large) avocados, pitted
2 ears of corn, grilled and husked
1/4 lb. red radishes (about 12 medium)
1/4 cup diced red onion

PROCEDURE:

First peel the husks back from the ears of corn and remove the silk. If you happen to find a corn earworm, that’s good news, because it tells you that the farmer did not overuse pesticides. Just remove the worm and cut away and rinse the affected area of the ear. Straighten the husks back over the ears and tie the ends together with a piece of loose husk. Soak the ears in cold water for 15 to 20 minutes.

Warm your grill or start the charcoal while the corn is soaking and prepare the dressing. Wash and juice the limes and crush or mince the garlic very finely. Whisk the cumin, garlic, salt, lime juice and oil together in a small bowl.

Shake the extra water off the ears and grill them over medium heat for about twenty minutes, turning them every four or five minutes, until the kernels are tender when you stick one with a fork or knife. Take the ears from the grill, remove the husks and allow the ears to cool.

The best avocados for this salad are just barely ripe. They should be slightly soft but not mushy. Wash and dry them and cut them in half with a large sharp knife. Remove the pits and use a soup spoon to carefully remove the flesh without crushing it. Slice the flesh into quarter inch thick slices. Put the slices in a large mixing bowl, pour two tablespoons of dressing over the top, and stir gently to coat each slice.

Remove the avocado slices, draining any extra dressing back into the bowl, and arrange them in a layer on a serving platter.

Peel the ears of corn and use a sharp knife to cut the kernels from the cob into the mixing bowl.

Clean and chop the onion into a medium dice. Wash and cut the radishes lengthwise into quarters. If necessary cut the quarters in half to make pieces no more than three-fourths of an inch in any dimension. Add the radishes and onion to the corn in the bowl. Stir in the rest of the dressing and stir to coat the vegetables well.

Use a slotted spoon to remove the vegetables from the dressing. Put them on top of the avocados and serve.

NOTES: Grilled corn is delicious. Soaking the ears provides the extra moisture needed to steam the kernels, and the charred husks add a subtle smoky flavor to the corn. Some people add butter or salt to the ears before grilling, but we let people add whatever they like at the table. Do not add anything to the ears you use for the salad as there is plenty of salt and oil in the dressing.

You can make a wonderful dinner of grilled chicken, grilled ears of corn and this salad. Grill the two ears first and let them cool while the chicken and other ears of corn are cooking and you are making the salad.